The public also can comment on the environmental assessment of survey activities for offshore wind projects south of the Islands before Dec. 3 by going to www.regulations.gov and searching for BOEM-2012-0086 or by sending comments by regular mail to Program Manager, Office of Renewable Energy Programs, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, 381 Elden St., HM 1328, Herndon, VA 20170-4817.

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BOSTON — A vast expanse of ocean south of Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket could be leased for offshore wind energy by the end of 2013, according to a timeline laid out by federal officials Tuesday.

"We're going to shoot to have that lease sale in that fall time period," Maureen Bornholdt, renewable energy program manager for the U.S. Interior Department's Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, said during a public meeting in Boston.

The estimated time frame for leasing means that selected wind energy developers would have until about the end of 2018 to submit construction and operations plans and potentially an additional 20 years to produce wind energy from the leased areas, Bornholdt said. The leasing plan does not affect Cape Wind, the proposed Nantucket Sound wind farm, which has already been awarded a lease by the federal government.

For Massachusetts, which under Gov. Deval Patrick set an aggressive goal of having 2,000 megawatts of wind energy — most coming from offshore — by 2020, the timing of the leasing process is a potential, if necessary, setback. "It's hard to speculate whether this will impact our goals," Massachusetts Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs spokeswoman Krista Selmi said after Tuesday's meeting.

Although Patrick has pushed for speed in leasing areas off the state's coast for wind energy, at other times he has called for a delay to ensure that all interested parties have the opportunity to comment on the process, Selmi said.

Tuesday's meeting was the first of four scheduled to answer questions and take comments on an environmental assessment of survey activities in the proposed leasing area, which covers nearly 743,000 acres, or 877 square nautical miles. Other meetings are scheduled for today on Martha's Vineyard and Thursday on

Nantucket.

The area could produce 4 gigawatts of wind energy, which is enough to power 1.7 million homes in the state, Bill White, assistant secretary of federal affairs at the state's energy and environmental agency, said at the start of Tuesday's meeting.

The environmental assessment found no significant impacts from potential site assessment activities, which could include increased vessel activity and constructing meteorological towers to collect weather data, said Brian Kevor, environmental protection specialist with the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management.

"We think it's an area that's eliminated a lot of the conflicts," Kevor said.

The danger of ship strikes or acoustics on North Atlantic right whales and other marine mammals would be small, Kevor said.